Allen Grant

Linnet


Скачать книгу

CHAPTER XXIX

       FROM LINNET’S STANDPOINT

       CHAPTER XXX

       AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR

       CHAPTER XXXI

       WHEN GREEK MEETS GREEK

       CHAPTER XXXII

       WEDDED FELICITY

       CHAPTER XXXIII

       PLAYING WITH FIRE

       CHAPTER XXXIV

       AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE

       CHAPTER XXXV

       GOLDEN HOPES

       CHAPTER XXXVI

       AN ECCLESIASTICAL QUESTION

       CHAPTER XXXVII

       BEGINNINGS OF EVIL

       CHAPTER XXXVIII

       HUSBAND OR LOVER?

       CHAPTER XXXIX

       DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE

       CHAPTER XL

       OPEN WAR

       CHAPTER XLI

       GOD’S LAW⁠—⁠OR MAN’S?

       CHAPTER XLII

       PRUDENCE

       CHAPTER XLIII

       LINNET’S RIVAL

       CHAPTER XLIV

       AND WILL’S

       CHAPTER XLV

       BY AUTHORITY

       CHAPTER XLVI

       HOME AGAIN!

       CHAPTER XLVII

       SEEMINGLY UNCONNECTED

       CHAPTER XLVIII

       THE BUBBLE BURSTS

       CHAPTER XLIX

       THE PIGEON FLIES HOME

       CHAPTER L

       ANDREAS HAUSBERGER PAYS

       CHAPTER LI

       EXIT FRANZ LINDNER

       CHAPTER LII

       A CONFESSION OF FAITH

      LINNET

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      ’Twas at Zell in the Zillerthal.

      Now, whoever knows the Alps, knows the Zillerthal well as the centre of all that is most Tyrolese in the Tyrol. From that beautiful green valley, softly smiling below, majestically grand and ice-clad in its upper forks and branches, issue forth from time to time all the itinerant zither-players and picturesquely-clad singers who pervade every capital and every spa in Europe. Born and bred among the rich lawns of their upland villages, they come down in due time, with a feather in their hats and a jodel in their throats, true modern troubadours, setting out on the untried ocean of the outer world⁠—⁠their voice for their fortune⁠—in search of wealth and adventures. Guitar on back and green braces on shoulders, they start blithely from home with a few copper kreuzers in their leather belts, and return again after a year or two, changed men to behold, their pockets full to bursting with dollars or louis or good English sovereigns.

      Not that you must expect to see the Tyrolese peasant of sober reality masquerading about in that extremely operatic and brigand-like costume in the upper Zillerthal. The Alpine minstrel in the sugar-loaf hat, much-gartered as to the legs, and clad in a Joseph’s coat of many colours, with